In her first question to Biden, Guthrie wondered if the President had
"repaired the damage from his lackluster performance in the first
debate," then followed up with: "Is the President's strategy here to beat Romney by disqualifying him in the minds of voters?" Meanwhile, Lauer began his interview with Ryan by asking essentially the same question:
"A lot of the reporting this morning says that the President was the
aggressor and may have won back some of the momentum lost after the
first debate. Would you agree with that?"

Lauer prefaced his question to Ryan by declaring: "I'm not gonna ask you who won, I think that's too easy for you."

Several of Guthrie's questions to Biden were open-ended, allowing him to spin however he wanted:

> At what point do you think the President compellingly and
persuasively articulated what he will do in the next four years, not
defending his record from the last four, but a forward-looking agenda?

> You were watching this debate closely. I wondered if you noticed
what a lot of people watching noticed, a moment when the candidates
seemed to circle each other, getting in each other's faces a little bit.
You've been around politics a long time. Have you ever seen anything
like that?

Rather than attempt to fact check Biden in one of his first interviews
following the vice presidential debate, Guthrie only asked a single
question on his style: "As you know, a lot of people noticed your
demeanor. When not answering a question, let's put it this way, you
seemed to be having a good time. Have you watched back tape of that
debate, and would you do it the same way all over again?"

It was a starkly different story in Lauer's exchange with Ryan moments
later. After pushing Ryan to agree that the President had gained
momentum following the second presidential debate, Lauer grilled the
Congressman on providing more specifics:

> You and Mitt Romney want to cut marginal tax rates about 20%
across the board. You don't want to add to the deficit. You don't want
to raise taxes on the middle class. A voter last night asked Governor
Romney for specifics about which deductions would go away, and Governor
Romney did not answer with specifics. The President jumped on that. Vice
President Biden with Savannah just jumped on that. I've looked back at
your interviews, Congressman, over the last couple of months on this
subject, you do not offer specifics. Why?

> But you're saying you're gonna leave it up to Congress, where's the leadership in this? You're a numbers guy?

> All I'm asking is, as you're asking undecided voters to close the
deal for you here, don't those voters have a right to know exactly what
they're getting?

Even with a soft question at the end of the segment, Lauer still
attempted to put Ryan on the spot: "On November 17th, a week or so after
the election, Wisconsin will play Ohio State in a football game. I want
you to tell the people of Ohio who's going to win that game....Who's
going to win the game, Congressman?...Tell the people of Ohio who's
gonna win the game."

The discussion prompted laughter in the Today studio and with Ryan, but
Guthrie made it seem as if the prior interrogation hadn't happened:
"Who new the toughest question would be about sports?"

-- Kyle Drennen is a news analyst at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow Kyle Drennen on Twitter.

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